Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Maps
- Abbreviations
- 1 First steps towards abolition, 1807–1822
- 2 Independence and abolition, 1822–1826
- 3 Brazil and the slave trade, 1827–1839
- 4 Treaty negotiations, 1830–1839
- 5 The British navy and the mixed commissions, 1830–1839
- 6 The extension of Britain's powers, 1839
- 7 Britain and the slave trade, 1839–1845
- 8 Slave trade, slavery and sugar duties, 1839–1844
- 9 Lord Aberdeen's Act of 1845
- 10 The aftermath of the Aberdeen Act
- 11 Changing attitudes and plans of action, 1845–1850
- 12 Crisis and final abolition, 1850–1851
- 13 The aftermath of abolition
- Appendix: Estimates of slaves imported into Brazil, 1831–1855
- Bibliography
- Index
9 - Lord Aberdeen's Act of 1845
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Maps
- Abbreviations
- 1 First steps towards abolition, 1807–1822
- 2 Independence and abolition, 1822–1826
- 3 Brazil and the slave trade, 1827–1839
- 4 Treaty negotiations, 1830–1839
- 5 The British navy and the mixed commissions, 1830–1839
- 6 The extension of Britain's powers, 1839
- 7 Britain and the slave trade, 1839–1845
- 8 Slave trade, slavery and sugar duties, 1839–1844
- 9 Lord Aberdeen's Act of 1845
- 10 The aftermath of the Aberdeen Act
- 11 Changing attitudes and plans of action, 1845–1850
- 12 Crisis and final abolition, 1850–1851
- 13 The aftermath of abolition
- Appendix: Estimates of slaves imported into Brazil, 1831–1855
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In a letter to Peel on 18 October 1844, Lord Aberdeen forecast that Britain's relations with Brazil would soon become ‘unpleasant and complicated’. Partly as a demonstration of her independence from Britain, Brazil had insisted—as she had the right to do—on terminating the Anglo-Brazilian commercial treaty of 1827, one of the two treaties which had been imposed upon her more than fifteen years earlier as the price of British recognition of her independence from Portugal. The other treaty, the Anglo-Brazilian abolition treaty of 1826, was of indefinite duration and could not therefore be terminated unilaterally by Brazil. However, the treaty of 1817, which formed part of the treaty of 1826—and a crucial part, since it was under this treaty that the British navy exercised the right of search and the Anglo-Brazilian mixed commissions adjudicated upon captured Brazilian vessels—was not permanent. Indeed, it would have been brought to an end as early as March 1830 when the Brazilian slave trade first became entirely illegal had not Lord Palmerston taken advantage of the separate article of 11 September 1817 which permitted it to continue in force for a further fifteen years.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Abolition of the Brazilian Slave TradeBritain, Brazil and the Slave Trade Question, pp. 242 - 266Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1970